95

I have a class .object which has an attribute called level. I want to get a list of all the different values of level on the page so I can select the highest one.

If I do something like:

$(".object").attr("level")

... will that get me a list of values that are the values of the level attribute? I suspect not, but then how do you do something like that?

Note: I don't want to select an HTML object for manipulation as is more common, rather I want to select values of the attribute.

EDIT: In order to get the highest "level" I have done this, but it doesn't seem to work. I will try the other suggested method now.

var highLevel=0;
$.each(".object[level]", function(i, value) {
   if (value>highLevel) {
       highLevel=value;
   }
});

alert(highLevel);
1
  • 5
    @Ankur you should select one of these as the answer to this question Nov 13, 2012 at 16:53

6 Answers 6

209

$(".object").attr("level") will just return the attribute of first the first .object element.

This will get you an array of all levels:

var list = $(".object").map(function(){return $(this).attr("level");}).get();
4
  • 6
    What does the .get() do? Oct 4, 2012 at 17:23
  • 23
    @Yuji - get converts the jQuery object to a regular array.
    – Kobi
    Oct 4, 2012 at 17:54
  • @MandeepJain: How does one mark an answer as 'correct'? This one may not have been marked as 'accepted', but over 100 people have voted it 'useful', and that's good enough for me! Oct 5, 2016 at 22:10
  • 1
    Great answer. A little more intuitive / cleaner for me is to .get() the array first, then use .map() plus arrow function (browser support: caniuse.com/#search=arrow) to build the array with a little plain javascript: $(".object").get().map(x => x.getAttribute('level'));
    – elPastor
    Feb 26, 2019 at 13:00
33

First part of the question, getting the attribute values into an array. See this question

jQuery get img source attributes from list and push into array

You would say

var levelArray = $('.object').map( function() {
    return $(this).attr('level');
}).get();

Second part of the question , you can use this technique to get the highest value

var maxValue = Math.max.apply( Math, levelArray );
3
<script type="text/javascript"> 
var max = 0;
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ 
    jQuery('.object[level]').each(function(){
        var num = parseInt($(this).attr('level'), 10);
        if (num > max) { max = num; }
    });
    alert(max);
});
</script>

I'm assuming markup like this:

<div class="object" level="1">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="10">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="20">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="1000">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="40">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="3">placeholder</div>
<div class="object" level="5">placeholder</div>

For my code I get "1000" alerted to me.

Here's another solution, combining several of the other replies from harpo, lomaxx, and Kobi:

jQuery(document).ready(function(){ 
    var list = $(".object[level]").map(function(){
        return parseInt($(this).attr("level"), 10);
    }).get();
    var max = Math.max.apply( Math, list ); 
    alert(max);
});
2

the selector

$(".object[level]")

will give you all the dom elements with class object and an attribute level.

Then you can just use the .each() method to iterate over the elements to get the highest value

1
  • $(".object[level=something]") where something is what attribute value you're looking for
    – James
    Jun 30, 2014 at 18:10
0

You can extend the functionality of Jquery and add your own 'attrs' implementation.

Add the following lines of code to your JavaScript file:

jQuery.fn.extend({
    attrs: function (attributeName) {
        var results = [];
        $.each(this, function (i, item) {
            results.push(item.getAttribute(attributeName));
        });
        return results;
    }
});

Now you can get the list of level values by calling:

$(".object").attrs("level")
0

The jQuery utility $.map() provides a cleaner approach that returns an array of values.

let arr = $.map($('.object'), x => $(x).data('level'));

console.log(arr);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<ol>
  <li class="object" data-level="1">HTML5 technically does not require closing li tags</li>
  <li class="object" data-level="2">The Tidy function in SO code snippets do</li>
  <li class="object" data-level="3">*shrug*</li>
</ol>

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